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Public-Private Partnerships Focal Point of Asia Pacific Meetings
While growth is returning to international
tourism, led to a large extent by Asia and the Pacific, public and private
bodies in the region must continue to work together on responses to the crisis
to ensure a sustained recovery.
This was the main conclusion to emerge from the 22nd Joint Meeting of the UNWTO
Commission for Asia and the Pacific and the preceding Conference on the
Socio-Economic Benefits of Tourism, organized in collaboration with the Vietnam
National Administration of Tourism (Hanoi, Vietnam, 10-12 May 2010).
“Following one of the toughest years for the tourism sector, Asia and the
Pacific has emerged a star performer and is expected to show the strongest
rebound given its renewed economic dynamism”, said UNWTO Secretary-General Taleb
Rifai at the opening of the Commission. “Indeed, data reported for the first
months of 2010 shows that the region is already leading the recovery with an
increase in international tourist arrivals of 10%”, he added.
Despite these encouraging figures, public and private tourism industry
representatives at both events were well aware of the fragile nature of the
global economic recovery and the need for increased collaboration to ensure
sustained growth.
Meeting with H.E. Mr. Pham Gia Khiem, Deputy Prime Minister of Vietnam, during
his visit to the country, Mr. Rifai debated these issues and expressed UNWTO’s
commitment to continue working with Vietnam to strengthen its tourism sector and
make it a sustained driver of economic growth and development for the country.
The core of the Commission Meeting was taken up with an interactive workshop in
which destinations and private stakeholders reported on successful strategies
employed to counteract the negative impacts of the recession. Sharing the
experiences of destinations and companies in this way will work towards
increasing total world tourism to the advantage of all; counteracting the
negative impacts of the recession on economies and employment; and spreading the
benefits of tourism to less developed countries, thereby making an important
contribution to poverty alleviation.
The importance of securing tourism’s recovery was further underlined at the
Conference on the Socio-Economic Benefits of Tourism at which leading speakers
from around the world explored tourism’s key role, current and future, in job
creation, income generation, infrastructure improvement and poverty alleviation
in the region, assessing the challenges to be faced and identifying key
opportunities.
Congratulating the outcome of the Commission Meeting and the Conference, Mr.
Rifai welcomed the focus on public-private collaboration. “Success stories
coming out of Asia and the Pacific destinations have shown the world that
tourism, as an important sector for socio-economic development, can and should
be at the forefront to combat global economic and ecological challenges. Strong
public-private cooperation, as witnessed during both these important events,
will prove key in a sustained recovery for international tourism”.
Affiliate UNWTO members representing the industry were for the first time
directly involved at both events, and a more interactive format was developed to
allow maximum participation from all attendees. In addition to the UNWTO members
present, some 200 representatives from Vietnamese local tourism authorities and
from the private sector also actively contributed.
Source: World Tourism Organization |
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